[54924] in SIPB IPv6
$400 off aBosley Treatment
daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (BosleyHair)
Sun May 24 18:27:40 2015
To: <sipbv6-mtg@charon2.mit.edu>
Date: Sun, 24 May 2015 15:27:38 -0700
From: "BosleyHair" <BosleyHair@mennerine.work>
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Hair loss.
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<span style="font-size: 9px ">109 E. 17th Suite 4552 - Cheyenne, WY 82001 </span>
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ives say the leg appears to be a right leg, but there
is no foot attached from which to pull prints. The leg also
appears to have come from a heavyset individual. It is clean-shaven, suggesting
it may be from a woman, but the sex has not yet
been confirmed.Click to read more on this story from MyFoxTampaBay.comSevered human leg
washes ashore: MyFoxTAMPABAY.com
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ores of oil deals, mostly with mid-sized companies. Baghdad considers all of
these deals illegal and has blacklisted the companies involved.The Kurds and Exxon
Mobil appear to be betting the Baghdad government will be forced to
acquiesce.They "are now in a position where they could essentially force Baghdad
to accept the status quo and the two separate regulatory systems that
exist in the country," said Riani.
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re courts.Rights groups have said some officers have explained the tests as
a way to clear their names of possible charges of abuse by
the protesters. Women protesters said they were threatened with prostitution charges before
they were subjected to the tests.Hossam Bahgat, a human rights activist who
was involved in the case, said the court ruling restores some justice
to the abused women and is a first step toward holding military
officials accountable."It is also very symbolically important because it is a crack
in the wall of impunity the (military rulers) have built around their
personnel and their conduct" against protesters and women in particular, he said.He
said the lawyers will try to upgrade the charges against the army
doctor to sexual assault instead of the current indecent act.Ibrahim, who covers
her hair in the style of conservative Muslims, told a private TV
station Monday that she filed the suits because she wanted to spare
others what she wen
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keptical about the handling of the accident and the investigation.The Cabinet statement
cited "serious design flaws and major safety risks" and what it said
were a string of errors in equipment procurement and management. It also
criticized the Railways Ministry's rescue efforts.The report affirmed earlier government statements that
a lightning strike caused one bullet train to stall and then a
sensor failure and missteps by train controllers allowed a second train to
keep moving on the same track and slam into it.Those singled out
for blame included former Minister of Railways Liu Zhijun, a bullet train
booster who was detained in February amid a graft investigation. Also criticized
was the general manager of the company that manufactured the signal, who
died of a heart attack while talking to investigators in August.The decision
to assign blame to one figure who already has been jailed and
another who is dead, along with mid-level managers who have been fired,
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s dragging women protesters by the hair, stomping on them and stripping
one half-naked in the street during a fierce crackdown on activists."This is
a case for all the women of Egypt, not only mine," said
Samira Ibrahim, 25, who was arrested and then spoke out about her
treatment.Ibrahim filed two suits against the practice, one demanding it be banned
and another accusing an officer of sexual assault. She was the only
one to complain publicly about a practice that can bring shame upon
the victim in a conservative society.A small group of women gathered outside
the court building, holding banners. One said, "Women of Egypt are a
red line."The three-judge panel said in its ruling that the virginity tests
were "a violation of women's rights and an aggression against their dignity."The
ruling also said a member of the ruling military council admitted to
Amnesty International in June that the practice was carried out on female
detainees in March to protect the army
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fine-tune workplace health plans. Employees and family members could be steered
to hospitals and doctors who follow the most effective treatment methods. Patients
going elsewhere could face higher copayments, similar to added charges they now
pay for "non-preferred" drugs on their insurance plans.Major insurers already are carrying
out their own effectiveness research, but it lacks the credibility of government-sponsored
studies.Not long ago, so-called "comparative effectiveness" research enjoyed support from lawmakers in
both parties. After all, much of the medical research that doctors and
consumers rely on now is financed by drug companies and medical device
manufacturers, who have a built-in interest in the findings. And a drug
maker only has to show that a new medicine is more effective
than a sugar pill -- not a competing medication -- to win
government approval for marketing.The 2009 economic stimulus bill included $1.1 billion for
medical effectiveness
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